Page 10 The INDEPENDENT, April 3, 2008 Tour offered on Horse management Horse Management on Small Acreages Farm Tours will be offered on Saturday, April 12, from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. at Abbey Creek Stables & Shadysprings Farm. This tour is being offered by Tualatin Soil and Water Con- servation District (SWCD) in Quilt and new owner meet for first time partnership with Columbia, Clackamas, and West Mult- nomah SWCDs. To register for these free events call the Tualatin SWCD at 503-648-3174 x102, or e- mail at lacey.townsend@or.na cdnet.net SOLV plans projects for April 19 From page 9 without Internet access may also call SOLV to register. “Our projects offer a variety of volunteer activities and ex- periences,” says program coor- dinator Nancy Willmes. “This year’s list includes tree plant- ing, roadside litter and illegal dumpsite cleanups, invasive vegetation removal in natural areas, neighborhood cleanups, landscaping on school grounds, and trail maintenance in recreation areas.” SOLV IT is one of the na- tion’s largest Earth Day events of its kind. The event focuses on livability issues as well as community building, and en- courages recycling and reuse of materials wherever possible. Major sponsors are PGE, Clackamas County, Clean Wa- ter Services, Metro, TriMet, Warn Industries and Waste Management of Oregon. Small grants and material support are provided by the Waste Man- agement Charitable Founda- tion. Supporting sponsors are Hawthorn Farm Athletic Club, IBM and the Oregon Depart- ment of Transportation. Media sponsors are KGW Northwest NewsChannel 8 and KINK fm 101.9. right to left: Louise Hamnett, Sue Goodhope and Ann Cameron at Sue’s Stitch in Time Quilt Shop hold the quilt Cameron won. The “Rising Sun” quilt that the Vernonia Senior Center raf- fled off in November has now been delivered. The winner of the quilt was Anne Cameron of 20 Years ago this Month The April 28, 1988, issue of The Independent had the fol- lowing article on page 24. The Vernonia City Council approved expenditures of up to $4,000 for improvements to the Vernonia Lake water intake system, at their April 18 meet- ing. Don Webb, representing the lake committee, said that high water in the Nehalem River B REWERY , F INE W INES AND A W ORLD OF D ELIGHTS Open Tues. - Sun. 10 am - 8 pm 5 Miles north of Vernonia on Hwy. 47 Call 503-429-4350 For to-go orders Keremeos, British Columbia, Canada. The Camerons and friends, Joe and Tracie Gordon, were touring the countryside on their A GALIS N ETWORK S ERVICES prevents the pump from work- ing as it should in the spring- time, and falling leaves clog the intake pipe in autumn. The committee asked for funds to place a culvert and an infiltration well into the river, and put the pump up higher. According to Webb, that would eliminate the problem of re- moving and replacing the pump each fall and spring. High Speed Wireless Internet. As fast as DSL for less cost. Domain Services Low cost registration and hosting. Unlimited Dialup Surf up to 5x faster with dialup accelerator included FREE. Local Areas Wireless Internet Heather Ln. to Cherry St., Downtown Vernonia Timber Rd./Hwy 47 Jct. to the Golf Course Check your email from anywhere using Agalis' Webmail. Action Ads INEXPENSIVE – EFFECTIVE 503-429-9410 bikes when they saw the sign for Vernonia, stopped and, dur- ing the visit, purchased the win- ning raffle ticket. This occurred during Jamboree. The address on the ticket that Mrs. Cameron purchased while here was not correct, so the search began. Then the flood hit, followed by bad weather that stalled the process further. Finally, on February 23, at Sue’s Stitch In Time quilt shop in Shelton, Washington, the hand-off was accomplished. Mrs. Cameron was celebrating her birthday with friends from McCleary, Louise Hamnett (one of the Vernonia quilt ladies) was celebrating her birthday with family in Shelton, and Sue Goodhope (another Vernonia quilt lady) was visiting her sister, Sandra, from Ed- monds, Washington. All the parties met at the quilt shop and Mrs. Cameron now has her quilt. All Agalis Internet accounts include: Email accounts, Email Virus & SPAM filtering, FREE Internet related support. Website: www.agalis.net Phone: 503-201-1846 Owned and Operated in Vernonia since 1998 At the April 4 meeting, the parks committee suggested that the city share an employee with the cemetery committee. Under the proposal, the city would pay half of the salary, and the cemetery operating committee, the other half. A report from the cemetery committee, on April 18, said they would prefer hiring a re- tired person with a pension as a half-time employee at mini- mum wage, and allow him to live in the house at the ceme- tery rent free. The council took no action on either proposal. The council made two ap- pointments in April: Joe Riley was appointed to represent the city on the Columbia County Economic Development Coun- cil, and Don Webb was ap- pointed to the city budget com- mittee to replace Martin Baugh- man, who moved outside the city limits. City residency isn’t required for the CCEDC ap- pointment. Police Chief Philip Jacobus met with the council on April 20 to review applications for a pa- trolman’s position with the city. He was instructed to arrange interviews with five applicants, and hopes to hire an officer by the middle of May.